Magnetic Field
Magnetic Field
Magnetic Field
In physics, a magnetic field is a field that permeates space and which exerts
a magnetic force on moving electric charges and magnetic dipoles. Magnetic
fields surround electric currents, magnetic dipoles, and changing electric
fields.
There are some notable specific incarnations of the magnetic field. For the
physics of magnetic materials, see magnetism and magnet, and more
specifically ferromagnetism, paramagnetism, and diamagnetism. For
constant magnetic fields, such as are generated by stationary dipoles and
steady currents, see magnetostatics. For magnetic fields created by changing
electric fields, see electromagnetism.
The electric field and the magnetic field are closely interlinked due to
Einstein's theory of special relativity (see relativistic electromagnetism).
Together, they make up the electromagnetic field.
Shapes of Magnet
The natural magnets i.e., iron ore were irregular in shape and weak. Later it was
found that iron or steel acquired magnetic properties on rubbing with a magnet.
Such magnets were called artificial or man-made magnet. These magnets have a
desired shape and strength.
Magnetic Dipole
The ordinary magnetic effects in materials are determined by atomic magnetism.
On continuing to cut a magnet into its smallest bit, we reach the level of a single
atom. This is a tiny current loop in which the current corresponds to the circulation
of the electrons in the atom. To this atomic current we associate a magnetic dipole
moment. This tiny bit cannot be further divided and hence the dipole is the
smallest fundamental unit of magnetism.
Definition
In classical physics,the magnetic field is a vector field (that is, some vector
at every point of space and time), with SI units of teslas (one tesla is one
newton-second per coulomb-metre) and cgs units of gauss. It has the
property of being a solenoidal vector field.
The field can be both defined and measured by means of a small magnetic
dipole (i.e., bar magnet). The magnetic field exerts a torque on magnetic
dipoles that tends to make them point in the same direction as the magnetic
field (as in a compass), and moreover the magnitude of that torque is
proportional to the magnitude of the magnetic field. Therefore, in order to
measure the magnetic field at a particular point in space, you can put a small
freely-rotating bar magnet (such as a compass) there: the direction it winds
up pointing is the direction of ; and the ratio of the maximum magnitude of
the torque to the dipole moment of the bar magnet is the magnitude .
It follows from any of these definitions that the magnetic field vector (being
a vector product) is a pseudovector (also called an axial vector).
B and H
There are two quantities that physicists may refer to as the magnetic field,
notated and . The vector field is known among electrical engineers as the
magnetic field intensity or magnetic field strength also known as auxiliary
magnetic field or magnetizing field. The vector field is known as magnetic
flux density or magnetic induction or simply magnetic field, as used by
physicists, and has the SI units of teslas (T), equivalent to webers (Wb) per
square metre or volt seconds per square metre. Magnetic flux has the SI
units of webers so the field is that of its areal density. [1][2][3][4][1] The
vector field has the SI units of amperes per metre and is something of the
magnetic analog to the electric displacement field represented by , with the
SI units of the latter being ampere-seconds per square metre. Although the
term "magnetic field" was historically reserved for , with being termed the
"magnetic induction", is now understood to be the more fundamental entity,
and most modern writers refer to as the magnetic field, except when context
fails to make it clear whether the quantity being discussed is or . See: [2]
The difference between the and the vectors can be traced back to Maxwell's
1855 paper entitled On Faraday's Lines of Force. It is later clarified in his
concept of a sea of molecular vortices that appears in his 1861 paper On
Physical Lines of Force - 1861. Within that context, represented pure
vorticity (spin), whereas was a weighted vorticity that was weighted for the
density of the vortex sea. Maxwell considered magnetic permeability µ to be
a measure of the density of the vortex sea. Hence the relationship,
In SI units, and are measured in teslas (T) and amperes per metre (A/m),
respectively; or, in cgs units, in gauss (G) and oersteds (Oe), respectively.
Two parallel wires carrying an electric current in the same direction will
generate a magnetic field that will cause a force of attraction between them.
This fact is used to define the value of an ampere of electric current.
(SI units)
(cgs units),
where is magnetization.
Force due to a magnetic field
where
where the vector direction is now associated with the current variable,
instead of the length variable. The two forms are equivalent.
If the wire is not straight but curved, the force on it can be computed by
applying this formula to each infinitesimal segment of wire, then adding up
all these forces via integration.
Direction of force
Current (I) through a wire produces a magnetic field () around the wire. The
field is oriented according to the right hand grip rule.
I is the current,
is a vector, whose magnitude is the length of the differential element
of the wire, and whose direction is the direction of conventional
current,
is the differential contribution to the magnetic field resulting from this
differential element of wire,
μ0 is the magnetic constant,
is the unit displacement vector from the wire element to the point at
which the field is being computed, and
r is the distance from the wire element to the point at which the field
is being computed.
Properties
Like any vector field, the magnetic field can be depicted with field lines -- a
set of lines through space whose direction at any point is the direction of the
local magnetic field vector, and whose density is proportional to the
magnitude of the local magnetic field vector. Note that the choice of which
field lines to draw in such a depiction is arbitrary, apart from the
requirement that they be spaced out so that their density approximates the
magnitude of the local field. The level of detail at which the magnetic field
is depicted can be increased by increasing the number of lines.
Although any vector field can be depicted with field lines, this visualization
is particularly helpful for the magnetic field (in three-dimensional space), as
it makes certain aspects of it more transparent. For example, "Gauss's law
for magnetism" states that the magnetic field is solenoidal (has zero
divergence). This is equivalent to the simple statement that, in any field-line
depiction of a magnetic field, the field lines cannot have starting or ending
points; they must form a closed loop, or else extend to infinity on both ends.
Various physical phenomena have the effect of displaying field lines. For
example, iron filings placed in a magnetic field will line up in such a way as
to visually show magnetic field lines (see figure at top); although a close
inspection will reveal that the "lines" are not quite continuous. Another place
where magnetic field lines are visually displayed is in the polar auroras, in
which visible streaks of light line up with the local direction of Earth's
magnetic field (due to plasma particle dipole interactions).
Note that when a magnetic field is depicted with field lines, it is not meant to
imply that the field is only nonzero along the drawn-in field lines. The field
is typically smooth and continuous everywhere, and can be estimated at any
point (whether on a field line or not) by looking at the direction and density
of the field lines nearby. The use of iron filings to display a field presents
something of an exception to this picture: the magnetic field is in fact much
larger along the "lines" of iron, due to the large permeability of iron relative
to air.
The end of a compass needle that points north was historically called the
"north" magnetic pole of the needle. Since dipoles are vectors and align
"head to tail" with each other to minimize their magnetic potential energy,
the magnetic pole located near the geographic North Pole is actually the
"south" pole.
The "north" and "south" poles of a magnet or a magnetic dipole are labelled
similarly to north and south poles of a compass needle. Near the north pole
of a bar or a cylinder magnet, the magnetic field vector is directed out of the
magnet; near the south pole, into the magnet. This magnetic field continues
inside the magnet (so there are no actual "poles" anywhere inside or outside
of a magnet where the field stops or starts). Breaking a magnet in half does
not separate the poles but produces two magnets with two poles each.
In 1882, Nikola Tesla identified the concept of the rotating magnetic field.
In 1885, Galileo Ferraris independently researched the concept. In 1888,
Tesla gained U.S. Patent 381,968 for his work. Also in 1888, Ferraris
published his research in a paper to the Royal Academy of Sciences in Turin.
Hall effect
The Hall effect is often used to measure the magnitude of a magnetic field as
well as to find the sign of the dominant charge carriers in semiconductors
(negative electrons or positive holes).
Special relativity and electromagnetism
More specifically, rather than treating the electric and magnetic fields as
separate fields, special relativity shows that they naturally mix together into
a rank-2 tensor, called the electromagnetic tensor. This is analogous to the
way that special relativity "mixes" space and time into spacetime, and mass,
momentum and energy into four-momentum.
where
where
where the vector direction is now associated with the current variable,
instead of the length variable. The two forms are equivalent.
If the wire is not straight but curved, the force on it can be computed by
applying this formula to each infinitesimal segment of wire, then adding up
all these forces via integration.
The Lorentz force on a macroscopic current is often referred to as the
Laplace force.
Direction of force
Current (I) through a wire produces a magnetic field () around the wire. The
field is oriented according to the right hand grip rule.
I is the current,
is a vector, whose magnitude is the length of the differential element
of the wire, and whose direction is the direction of conventional
current,
is the differential contribution to the magnetic field resulting from this
differential element of wire,
μ0 is the magnetic constant,
is the unit displacement vector from the wire element to the point at
which the field is being computed, and
r is the distance from the wire element to the point at which the field
is being computed.
Replace each circle with a coil of 10, 100 or more turns, carrying the
same current (figure below): the attraction or repulsion increase by an
appropriate factor. In fact, each coil acts very much like a magnet
with magnetic poles at each end (an "electromagnet"). Ampere
guessed that each atom of iron contained a circulating current, turning
it into a small magnet, and that in an iron magnet all these atomic
magnets were lined up in the same direction, allowing their magnetic
forces to add up.